"Fire-resilient landscapes” and “fire-adapted communities” through biocultural restoration as a fire risk mitigation strategy.

A clear-eyed view on historic harms by settler societies: Settler transition to large-scale agriculture (plantations) transformed ecohydrological conditions and introduced weeds. The neglected land and extractive tourism practices drive increases in fire risks.

"We argue that decolonizing postplantation landscapes through the restoration and reconnection of people to land will not only help prevent future catastrophic fires, but also address social and environmental inequities.The connections of colonialism to contemporary extreme fire regimes are not unique to Hawaiʻi. The dispossession of Indigenous communities worldwide has suppressed cultural burning and altered fire regimes that support the production of food and material culture."
>>
On the anniversary of the Maui fires, a call for Indigenous land care to mitigate future disasters, D. Nākoa Farrant et al
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2401045121
#bushfires #fires #colonialism #SettlerSociety #extractivism #water #plantations #SettlerSocieties #unsustainability #dispossession #IndigenousPeoples #IndigenousKnowledge #BioculturalRestoration #CulturalBurning #restoration

Listened to Part 1 of the Paul Cereghino interview and amazed at all the thought, effort, and connection-building he's had to do just to get groups of humans to volunteer a weekend doing #ecosystem restoration / #BioculturalRestoration work: https://earthregenerators.org/episode-23-restoration-camping-with-paul-cereghino-part-1/ .

If I still lived in the #salishsea ( #pacificnorthwest ), I'd probably be chomping to find a way to help his guild out.

Episode 23 - Restoration Camping with Paul Cereghino—Part 1

In this episode, Andy Wildman speaks with Paul Cereghino about his recent work in the Salish Sea area of the Pacific North-West of the USA, to develop something he loosely calls Restoration Camping. In contrast to Paul's day job—restoration ecology with the US Government— this engagement with landscape is

Earth Regenerators
If I was still in the #salishsea area (notably around #seattle & eastward) and didn't mind a bit of cooler weather camping I'd consider joining Paul & co to help develop a #BioculturalRestoration Field Station - they did a pilot back in the summer and have some more trips planned next year: https://ecosystemguild.org/2022/05/08/invitation-to-camp-skykomish/
Invitation to Join the Skykomish Field Station - The Ecosystem Guild

Join Us To Develop A Bio-cultural Restoration Field Station We invite you to spend a long weekend camping on the Lower Skykomish River, near Monroe Washington. We will learn about river restoration, and restore forest and develop forest gardens in neglected riparian forest. We operate as volunteers of the Snohomish Conservation District, hosted by the

The Ecosystem Guild - Restoring Watersheds Through Community